Lots of talk from Chinese officials BUT it is not possible to stimulate an export driven economy from within.
China is slowing because the world is slowing, China will continue to slow till growth sits at 6%. Shanghai at that point values at 2500.
China’s imports tumbled in August raising concerns about the health of the world’s second-largest economy and its contribution to global growth.
Imports dived 13.8 percent from a year earlier far more than analysts had forecast and a tenth consecutive monthly drop reflecting both lower global commodity prices and sluggish demand.
A surprise devaluation in the yuan early last month combined with slowing consumer demand will dent the prospects of imports picking up significantly anytime soon.
Much of China’s imports are commodities and other raw materials going into factories that turn them into goods for sale overseas so the fall could be an ominous sign for exports in the coming months.
Exports fell less than forecast sliding 5.5 percent but analysts were still doubtful that China can now achieve its year-end trade growth target of 6 percent.
‘The yuan devaluation will have limited impact on exports which are falling because demand is weak not because the price is not good’ said Li Jian head of foreign trade research at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation the Commerce Ministry’s think-tank.
China’s foreign exchange reserves posted their biggest ever monthly fall in August reflecting Beijing’s efforts to stabilize the yuan following its devaluation.
The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) the central bank said its intervention in the forex market was one of the reasons for the drop in foreign exchange reserves adding that any future fluctuations in reserves would be ‘normal.’
The bank said in a statement late on Tuesday that China’s economy could maintain medium- to high-speed growth in the long term and the current account would remain in surplus also over the long term.
STOCKS VOLUMES TUMBLE
Chinese policymakers have been trying to reassure financial markets that their currency is stable and that the recent stock market turbulence is easing.
Stocks have fallen around 40 percent since mid-June with the Shanghai Composite Index hovering around the 3000 point level having been above 5000 less than three months ago.
Shares initially declined on Tuesday but rallied later in the day to finish almost 3 percent higher though trading volumes in both stocks and futures were down sharply.
The CSI300 index of the biggest stocks listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen closed up 2.57 percent while Shanghai was up 2.93 percent.
Volume in the Shanghai market was the lowest since February a month when trading is usually thin due to the Chinese New Year Festival.
The stock futures market was hit by an abrupt reversal in policy that caused trading volumes to collapse. Last Wednesday China raised the margin requirements for futures not being used for hedging purposes to 40 percent of the contract’s value from 30 percent.
The futures contract for the CSI300 index maturing in September has seen volumes dive logging 28957 transactions on Tuesday down almost 100 percent from a week ago. On Aug. 25 when markets were in a major sell-off the contract saw 2.43 million transactions.
Chinese authorities have rolled out a series of measures to bring a sense of calm back to their stock markets and reduce short-term speculation.
On Monday the finance ministry dangled incentives to encourage longer-term investments saying it would remove personal income tax on dividends from shares held for more than a year and halve it on those held for between a month and a year.
That announcement came hours after regulators and exchanges proposed introducing a ‘circuit breaker’ on the CSI300 index to help steady the market.
Analysts said these measures are unlikely to encourage many investors to come back into the market for stocks in either mainland China known as A-shares or Hong Kong given the longer-term economic concerns hanging over the market.
‘While investors see value in Hong Kong-listed Chinese equities they’re concerned about an inevitable US Federal Reserve rate hike and Beijing’s ability to manage A-shares growth capital flight and its currency’ analysts at Nomura wrote in a client note.
In its statement the PBOC also said new regulations imposed on the currency forward market this month were not a form of capital control. The measures introduced after investors speculated in the market would help stabilize China’s financial system at a time when increased yuan volatility is likely to cause more companies to incur foreign exchange losses it said.
The post China will Continue to Contract appeared first on Live Trading News.